AITA for making my parents take me out on a birthday dinner where they will not eat?
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At some point, this stops being about restaurants and starts being about a familiar dynamic where every decision has to pass through a committee that only seems to exist when it is your turn. Other people’s birthdays are simple. They pick, everyone shows up, no notes. Yours becomes a group project with edits, objections, and a final version that looks nothing like what you asked for.
Then comes the part where people technically agree while making sure you feel it. They will show up, but complain. They will participate, but reluctantly. They will make sure you understand that your preference has created a situation that needs to be commented on, evaluated, and lightly criticized in real time. It is not a refusal. It is something much more annoying, which is compliance with commentary.
The consistency is what really lands it. It is never just the main decision. Every small choice gets pulled back toward something more acceptable, more normal, more aligned with everyone else’s taste. By the end, the celebration still happens on paper, but the person it is for is left wondering why it felt like they spent the whole time negotiating their own birthday.
At some point, you either learn to laugh at how absurd that is or you quietly stop asking for anything at all, which, ironically, is the only version of the day that no one else seems interested in controlling.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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